Testing and characterizing enzymes and membrane-bound carrier proteins acting on amphipathic ligands in the presence of bilayer membrane material and soluble binding protein. Application to the uptake of oleate into isolated cells.

Autor: Heirwegh KP; Laboratory of Hepatology, Faculty of Medicine, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium., Meuwissen JA
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: The Biochemical journal [Biochem J] 1992 Jun 01; Vol. 284 ( Pt 2), pp. 353-61.
DOI: 10.1042/bj2840353
Abstrakt: 1. A multiphasic modelling approach [Heirwegh, Meuwissen, Vermeir & De Smedt (1988) Biochem. J. 254, 101-108] is applied to systems containing poorly water-soluble amphipathic reactants, membrane material, soluble binding protein and acceptor protein (enzyme or membrane-bound carrier protein). 2. The field of application is constrained by the assumptions (i) that the amount of acceptor-bound substrate is small compared with the total amount and (ii) that all preceding chemical reactions and steps of mass transport are rapid compared with the chemical change monitored. 3. Initial-rate formulae for systems in which an acceptor interacts with unbound or protein-bound ligand are given. The saturation curves are near-hyperbolic or sigmoidal, depending both (i) on the form of ligand (unbound or protein-bound) acted upon by the acceptor and (ii) on whether the assays are performed at constant concentration of soluble binding protein Cp or at constant substrate/binding-site molar ratio RS. 4. Several diagnostic features permit unequivocal distinction between acceptor action on unbound or protein-bound substrate. In the former case, saturation curves, run at the same constant concentration of one of several binding proteins of increasing binding affinity, will show progressively increasing inhibition, the shape changing from near-hyperbolic at Km' less than K1' to sigmoidal at Km' greater than K1'.Km' is the effective Michaelis constant of the acceptor and K1' the effective dissociation constant of the binding sites of the soluble protein (for the sites with the higher binding affinity, if several classes of binding site are present on the protein). Alternatively, the maximum velocity obtained at constant RS less than or equal to 1 should increase hyperbolically with RS/(1-RS) for a binding protein with a single class of binding site. The formula that applies when the binding protein contains two classes of independent binding site is also available. When the acceptor acts on protein-bound ligand, the maximum velocity obtained at constant binding-protein concentration, Cp, increases hyperbolically with Cp. 5. Application of these and additional criteria to initial-rate data on the uptake of oleate into isolated cells supports a mechanism of carrier-mediated uptake of the unbound ligand and allows one to clarify some observations that hitherto had been poorly explained. 6. The influence of soluble binding protein on the reaction and substrate specificities of ligand/acceptor interaction is also discussed. 7. In its present state, data treatment for 'double binding-protein systems' generally requires separate determination of the binding parameters of the soluble binding protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Databáze: MEDLINE